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A growing concern of mine has been the unrealistic expectations for
new computer-related technologies introduced into all kinds of
organizations. Unrealistic expectations lead to disappointment, and
a schizophrenic approach to the introduction of new technologies.
The UNIX and real-time UNIX operating system technologies are major
examples of emerging technologies with great potential benefits but
unrealistic expectations. Users want to use UNIX as a common
operating system throughout large segments of their organizations.
A common operating system would decrease software costs by helping
to provide portability and interoperability between computer
systems in today's multivendor environments. Users would be able to
more easily purchase new equipment and technologies and
cost-effectively reuse their applications. And they could more
easily connect heterogeneous equipment in different departments
without having to constantly write and rewrite interfaces. On the
other hand, many users in various organizations do not understand
the ramifications of general-purpose versus real-time UNIX. Users
tend to think of "real-time" as a way to handle exotic
heart-monitoring or robotics systems. Then these users use UNIX for
transaction processing and office applications and complain about
its performance, robustness, and reliability. Unfortunately, the
users don't realize that real-time capabilities added to UNIX can
provide better performance, robustness and reliability for these
non-real-time applications. Many other vendors and users do realize
this, however. There are indications even now that general-purpose
UNIX will go away as a separate entity. It will be replaced by a
real-time UNIX. General-purpose UNIX will exist only as a subset of
real-time UNIX.
A growing concern of mine has been the unrealistic expectations for
new computer-related technologies introduced into all kinds of
organizations. Unrealistic expectations lead to disappointment, and
a schizophrenic approach to the introduction of new technologies.
The UNIX and real-time UNIX operating system technologies are major
examples of emerging technologies with great potential benefits but
unrealistic expectations. Users want to use UNIX as a common
operating system throughout large segments of their organizations.
A common operating system would decrease software costs by helping
to provide portability and interoperability between computer
systems in today's multivendor environments. Users would be able to
more easily purchase new equipment and technologies and
cost-effectively reuse their applications. And they could more
easily connect heterogeneous equipment in different departments
without having to constantly write and rewrite interfaces. On the
other hand, many users in various organizations do not understand
the ramifications of general-purpose versus real-time UNIX. Users
tend to think of "real-time" as a way to handle exotic
heart-monitoring or robotics systems. Then these users use UNIX for
transaction processing and office applications and complain about
its performance, robustness, and reliability. Unfortunately, the
users don't realize that real-time capabilities added to UNIX can
provide better performance, robustness and reliability for these
non-real-time applications. Many other vendors and users do realize
this, however. There are indications even now that general-purpose
UNIX will go away as a separate entity. It will be replaced by a
real-time UNIX. General-purpose UNIX will exist only as a subset of
real-time UNIX.
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